Illinois Speaker of the House Michael Madigan, D-Chicago, speaks to lawmakers during a House Committee hearing on pension legislation at the Illinois State Capitol Thursday, May 9, 2013 in Springfield Ill. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

FILE - In this Tuesday, Nov. 16, 2010 file photo, House Committee on Standards of Official Conduct ranking member Rep. Michael McCaul, R-Texas, arrives for a closed door executive session on Capitol Hill in Washington. McCaul, the chairman of the House Homeland Security Committee, says he believes the Boston Marathon bombing suspects had some training in carrying out their attack. McCaul is citing the type of device used in the attack, the shrapnel-packed pressure-cooker bombs, and the weapons' sophistication as signs of training. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File)

FILE - In this Sept. 24, 2011 file photo, House Administration Committee Chair Rep. Candice Miller, R-Mich. speaks on Mackinac Island, Mich. Members of Congress are traveling less and worrying more about meeting office salaries. Their aides are having to deal with longer lines and fewer prospects of a raise. Such are the indignities thrust upon the people who brought the country $85 billion in automatic government spending cuts this month. Miller has promoted a bill to slash the budgets of House committee by 11 percent. (AP Photo/Carlos Osorio, File)

FILE - In this March 4, 2012 file photo, Asian Development Bank President Haruhiko Kuroda, who was recently nominated by Japan's Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to head the country's central bank, arrives at a lower house committee meeting in Tokyo. The lower house of Japan's parliament has endorsed Kuroda, a finance ministry veteran, to become central bank governor and spearhead efforts to break the world's third-largest economy out of its long bout of deflation. (AP Photo/Shizuo Kambayashi, File)

File - in the Feb. 17, 2009 file photo, Rep. Harold Dutton, D-Houston, pauses during the House session, in Austin, Texas. State legislatures from Tennessee to Kansas to Indiana to Alaska are considering measures to legalize the switchblade, the favored weapon of fictional midcentury street gangs. In Texas, where weapons laws tend toward the permissive, switchblade legislation has advanced to the House Committee on Criminal Jurisprudence. All of which might seem fairly unremarkable, except that the bill's author, Dutton, has a National Rifle Association rating of F. (AP Photo/Harry Cabluck)